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  1. Department of Word Lists

    Cheese Words

    Chef Terrance Brennan is the founder of Artisanal Premium Cheese, a company that practices the fine art of affinage -- the age-old craft of maturing and aging cheese to achieve peak flavor. He's also something of a cheese revolutionary -- a chef who's helped Americans discover and appreciate the sublime magic of handcrafted artisanal cheese (we'll get to that word in a minute). What better person to ask about cheese words?

    Paste. "The body within the rind of the cheese, what the French call the 'pate.' In other words, the interior of the cheese."

    Farmstead. "Cheese milked and produced from the same farm."

  2. Blog Du Jour

    Olde English

    Keen to read the "most fresshe and newe postes?" These sites celebrate the English of yore!

    Geoffrey Chaucer Hath a Blog (Yes, folks, a blog written entirely in Middle English!)

    Lectio Anglorum

    Anglo-Saxon Aloud

    Old English in New York

    Unlocked Wordhoard

  3. Behind the Dictionary

    The Hidden Lives of Words
    Wordsmith.org is something of an institution on the Internet, an online community started by computer-engineer-turned-linguist Anu Garg back in 1994 that now reaches more than 600,000 subscribers in 200 countries with its daily A.Word.A.Day newsletter. This email is more than just a new word every day: Anu also adds a daily, delicious quote from his extensive literary readings to inspire, challenge -- and surprise -- us. The Visual Thesaurus is proud to sponsor A.Word.A.Day and delighted to speak with Anu about his own, latest, book, on "the hidden lives and strange origins of words" entitled, The Dord, the Diglot, and an Avocado or Two. Our conversation:
  4. Dog Eared

    Anu Garg's Books

    Anu Garg, the creator of the popular Word.A.Day email we interview in this week's "Behind the Dictionary" feature, recommends these books on words and language:

    Word Origins by Anatoly Liberman

    Limits of Language by Mikael Parkvall

    The Oxford Guide to World English by Tom McArthur

    The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots by Calvert Watkins

  5. Teachers at Work

    Writing the College Admissions Essay
    As every high school senior -- and parent of said senior -- knows all too well, now is crunch time for college applications. In her latest column, teacher Shannon Reed wrote an excellent guide to choosing the right college. Now we want to zero in on the big, hairy challenge to getting into that school: The personal essay. What should you write about? What should you not write about? To get the inside scoop, we called Richard Ries, AP English teacher and College Counseling Office essay advisor at Ben Lipson Hillel Community High School in North Miami Beach, FL. Here's our conversation:
  6. Blog Excerpts

    One Laptop Per Child
    "Our mission is to provide a means for learning, self-expression and exploration to the nearly two billion children of the developing world with little or no access to education," says this charitable program. How? By putting as many laptops in the hands of as many kids as possible. How can you help? Check out their website to learn more.
  7. Teachers at Work

    Helping Your Students Spend $80,000: The College Search in Your Classroom

    Shannon Reed is an award-winning playwright who teaches high school English to a large pack of bright young women at a private school on the beach in Queens, New York. She graciously contributed this column:

    If you're a teacher, you've no doubt already have made the following observation: the two emotions that truly motivate a student are genuine interest... and fear. Many of us no doubt experienced this phenomenon ourselves when we were in school. I remember being motivated to do good work in three classes in high school: English and History, which I genuinely loved, and Earth Science, where the fearsome Mr. Colsun looked ever-ready to explode into a hellish ball of flame that would singe my eyebrows and ruin my complexion if I mislabeled the periodical table one more time. Mr. Colsun, I wish you ill, but to this day, I still know were mercury goes.

  8. Behind the Dictionary

    The Language of Science Fiction
    Words like "spacesuit," "blast off" and "robot" weren't born in science -- but in science fiction. To learn more, we called Jeff Prucher, the editor of Brave New Words: The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction, a rich and fascinating compendium of words invented and popularized by the genre. We spoke to him about science fiction's impact on English:
  9. Dog Eared

    Books on Language and SciFi

    Jeff Prucher, the science fiction dictionary editor we interview in this week's "Behind the Dictionary" feature, recommends these books on the intersection of language and science fiction:

    Critical Terms for Science Fiction and Fantasy by Gary K. Wolfe

    Science Fiction Quotations by Gary Westfahl

    Slayer Slang: A Buffy the Vampire Slayer Lexicon by Michael Adams ("A landmark in the study of the language of the fantastic.")

  10. Blog Du Jour

    Language and SciFi Online

    Jeff Prucher, the science fiction dictionary editor we interview in this week's "Behind the Dictionary" feature, recommends these websites:

    Tenser, Said the Tensor "frequently touches on the subject of language and science fiction."

    Suzette Hayden Elgin's The Linguistics and Science Fiction Newsletter

    The Oxford English Dictionary's Science Fiction Citation Project


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